Officials scrambled Tuesday to retrieve ballots from a handful of towns because the scanned sheets were illegible. They also spent the day verifying all of the results from hundreds of communities across the state.

That sets the stage for tabulations under ranked-choice voting.

Under the system, voters rank candidates from first to last on the ballot, and a candidate who collects a majority of the vote wins. If there’s no majority, then losing candidates are eliminated and votes reallocated in additional rounds of tabulations.

The election system is being used in a gubernatorial race featuring seven Democratic candidates, none of whom received a majority.

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10:50 a.m.

The nation’s biggest test of ranked-choice voting is nearing a result.

Maine officials scrambled Tuesday to retrieve ballots from a handful of towns following a data processing error. Next up, the game of political survival begins with a series of tabulations.

With ranked-choice elections, voters rank candidates from first to last on the ballot, and a candidate who collects a majority of the vote wins. If there’s no majority, then losing candidates are eliminated and votes reallocated in additional rounds of tabulations.

The system will be used in a gubernatorial race featuring seven Democratic candidates, none of whom received a majority. It’ll also be used in the Democratic primary in the 2nd Congressional District unless it’s determined that Jared Golden eked out a majority in the first round.

The secretary of state’s office said it still has to upload the election results from several dozen towns into computers. Then the tabulations will begin on Tuesday.

With ranked-choice voting, voters rank the candidate preferences from first to last on the ballot, and a candidate who collects a majority of the vote wins. If there’s no majority, then losing candidates are eliminated and votes reallocated in additional rounds of tabulations.

The system will be used in a gubernatorial race featuring seven Democratic candidates, none of whom received a majority vote. It’ll also be used in the Democratic primary in the 2nd Congressional District unless it’s determined that Jared Golden eked out a majority in the first round.

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The nation’s biggest test of ranked-choice voting neared a result but there won’t be an announcement of winners in two Democratic primaries until Wednesday.

Maine election officials scrambled to retrieve ballots from a handful of towns because the scanned sheets were illegible and spent most of the day verifying all of the results from hundreds of communities before ranked-choice tabulations can take place.

Under ranked-choice elections, voters rank candidates from first to last on the ballot, and a candidate who collects a majority of the vote wins. If there’s no majority, then losing candidates are eliminated and votes reallocated in additional rounds of tabulations.

The system will be used in a gubernatorial race featuring seven Democratic candidates, none of whom received a majority. It’ll also be used in the Democratic primary in the 2nd Congressional District unless it’s determined that Jared Golden eked out a majority in the first round.

Republicans, meanwhile, rallied outside the Statehouse on Tuesday to support their candidate for governor, Shawn Moody, who won with a majority in his race, making additional tabulations unnecessary.

Moody, who ran for governor as an independent in 2010, was flanked by the three Republicans he defeated.

Regardless of his opponent, Moody said he felt confident that he’ll win if the “people who do the work” show up and vote during the November general election.

“The people that do the work are tired of the people who don’t do the work telling us” how to run things, he told a group outside the Statehouse.

Maine voters have green-lighted ranked-choice voting for U.S. Senate and House races in November, but it won’t be used in the governor’s race because of state constitutional concerns.

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